The 46th American Open in Los Angeles drew 212
players, with another 197 participating in the side events. The field included four GMs, one WGM,
and six IMs (plus Cyrus Lakdawala, winner of the Action tournament.)

GM Joshua Friedel's victory on tiebreaks in the 39-player
Open section was a fitting sendoff as he prepares to move back to the East
Coast. Josh played a nice attack against top seed, fellow GM Alejandro Ramirez,
in the fourth round of the Game/60 schedule. Josh pinpointed 20.d5! and 23.c5!
as key moves.

Of the other winners, Sevillano's most interesting game came
in Round 6 against the young Roman Yankovsky. Enrico's 14th move is
an apparent innovation in a known position - but perhaps not a good one, as
White appears to have the advantage after 17.f4 Nxd3+ 18.cxd3. Instead,
Yankovsky let Black get a second pawn for the Exchange in return for an
apparently dominating king position. This proved evanescent, however, and
24.Rf6 didn't help matters. Sevillano wound up with a dangerous passed e-pawn
and wrapped things up with a nice interference theme.

Defending champ Melik Khachiyan rebounded from a listless
first-round loss and a half-point bye to win five straight.

GM Melikset Khachiyan

He then coasted
into the first-place tie with a quick draw against Sevillano. His sixth round
win over Yankovsky was a smooth technical performance, as Black's compensation
for a sacrificed pawn was illusory. When Yankovsky finally snared the weak e5
pawn, Khachiyan had a winning pawn mass on the queenside, and a last-ditch
effort by Black to weave a mating net failed.

GM Mark Paragua

Second seed GM Mark Paragua, who missed a chance to catch up
with the winners by drawing with Ramirez in the eighth round, displayed a
dangerous piece sac in the always-tactical Sveshnikov variation against new IM
and World Under 18 Champion Steven Zierk. Alas for Steven, White's virtually
winning queen "pseudo-sac" on move 18 has been seen before; 17...Bh6 improves for
Black.

Zierk proved that he's "ambidextrous" by uncorking the
resilient French Defense against the Under 2450 winner, IM Zhanibek Amanov, in
the fourth round. White's eagerness to attack did him in; he should have
prefaced Qg4 with 17.Nxc6. Another improvement would have been 20.Qxe4 Rxe5
21.Rxd4 Rxe4 22.Rxd8 Rxd8 23.Nf6+ Kg7 24.Nxe4, though Black has some endgame
advantage. Finally, with two pieces for a rook, Steven found an ingenious way
to secure a winning passed pawn.

The Under 2300 winner, 13-year-old David Adelberg of Arizona, had a great event, raising his USCF rating to a personal best of 2349. His seventh round win over WFM Tatev
Abrahamyan shows that he's not afraid of the Benko Gambit! (In this game, on
move 18 "heavy piece" moves such as ...Qb7, ...Ra5, or ...Rb8 all seem superior to
the game continuation.) David also won the cumulative upset points prize for the
Open section (local philanthropist Dr. Harold Valery again donated $500 for
these awards).

One non-prizewinner, veteran IM Tim Taylor, quickly
generated a winning attack against FM Harry Akopyan. 9...c6 or 9...Ra7, and
subsequently 11...c5, improve for Black.White never needed to recapture on b6!

Let's note the (all clear) winners of the other sections:
Varun Krishnan in Under 2200, Shaurya Jain in Under 2000, Ruben Burciaga in
Under 1800, Aaron Chang in Under 1600, and Julian Daza in Under 1400. In the
latter section, Owen Anderson took Under 1200 honors, and Shib Sen was best
unrated. And let's mention three players who played "up" a section and tied for
second place: Rachael Eng in Under 1800 and Carol Mayer-Kleist and Om
Chinchwadkar (1192!) in Under 1600.

IM Zierk had a measure of revenge in the Quick, going 10-0.
Scholastic winners were Richard Yang (K-12), Stephanie Shao in K-8, Alice
Salvaryan (K-6), and Noah Daniels in K-3. In addition to large two-post
trophies, these kids earned the opportunity for free lessons from FM Joel
Banawa.

After 46 years, the American Open is something of a
"homecoming" on the Southern California scene. Some players returned from
absences (for instance, Bobby Liu, who took second in Under 1400 after a
six-year layoff); others dropped by to say hi. One of them, a filmmaker, even
hinted that he might be doing a project on chess with a foundation grant!
Everyone could check out the top games on the demonstration boards, play some
skittles, check out Chess Palace's great selection of books and equipment,
watch a video, or listen to a lecture. Friedel and Khachiyan spoke, along with
the always-popular IM Jeremy Silman, whose fourth edition of How to Reassess
Your Chess was just published. Kostya Kavutskiy also discussed the first
season of the LA Vibe in the US Chess League (Kostya has also written about the
US Chess League for CLO).

Most players appreciate the complexities of directing a big
tournament. In addition to assistants Anthony Ong, John Hayes, and Takashi
Iwamoto, a number of players and parents pitched in to help out from time to
time.

But the burdens of organizing a tournament are
less apparent. These include hotel negotiations, structuring the prize fund and
round times, publicity, preparing a flyer (Jay Stallings did a great one for us
this time), processing the entries. The organizers must also ensure that the
guaranteed prize money is there in any contingency. The sudden death of John
Hillery, my previous webmaster and PayPal conduit, greatly complicated matters,
though Anthony Ong stepped in ably. Stress becomes more of a burden with age,
so this writer (a veteran of 26 American Opens, the last eight years as sole
organizer) announced that he will no longer be organizing (as opposed to just
directing) big tournaments. It's been quite a ride, but it's time for someone
younger to step up to the plate!